This happened 11 days after a similar incident in Abakaliki Prison, Ebonyi State, that led to the death of six inmates and injuries to four prison warders.
The Monday riot occurred two months after two inmates, standing trial for culpable homicide, escaped from the Kuje Prison on June 25. The fleeing inmates have yet to be re-arrested.
Sources in the prison said the violent 
protest was brought under control by the armed squad of the Nigerian 
Prisons Service supported by soldiers providing additional security 
cover for the formation.
The incident, it was learnt, caused 
panic among residents of Kuje community, who believed that the prison 
was under attack by terrorists.
The Controller of Prisons, FCT Command, 
Daniel Odharo, in a statement, confirmed the crisis at the prison but 
said there was no injury or escape by inmates.
Odharo said, “At about 1000hrs on 
Monday, staff of Kuje Prison carried out a routine cell-search which is a
 part of the prisons operational guidelines to prevent the breach of 
security within and around the prisons.
“Some inmates tried to resist the 
exercise, which led to an altercation between the search party and the 
inmates. This was quickly put under effective control. No prisoner was 
injured, no property damaged and the yard is calm and peaceful.”
Investigations by one of our 
correspondents indicated that the violence was instigated by convicts, 
who refused to allow  warders to carry out a search on their cells for 
prohibited items.
One of our correspondents gathered from a
 reliable source in the prison that during the search, 25 mobile sets 
were recovered from a suspected Boko Haram inmate.
The source stated, “The incident 
happened this morning. The warders, who were acting on instructions from
 the prison authorities, decided to search the cells and seize 
prohibited items.
“During the search, they found 25 
handsets with a Boko Haram suspect. After a search of the convicts’ 
cells, they moved to the awaiting-trial cells.
“But those men, who saw the warders 
approaching with some ‘already’ seized items, decided to resist them.  
They attacked the warders with stones and every object they could lay 
their hands on, and in the process, many of the warders were injured.”
It was gathered that after a search, 
some substances, suspected to be cannabis, were also uncovered in some 
cells and confiscated.
Another prison source told The PUNCH that the warders, who were overwhelmed, retreated for reinforcement.
They were said to have opened fire on 
some of the inmates, during which some of them were injured, though it 
could not be ascertained if any of the inmates died as some suspected.
“I can’t say the total number of 
casualties among the inmates, but I can confirm to you that many of the 
warders were injured,” he added.
The source explained that the inmates 
resisted the warders because the prohibited items were brought in by 
warders after being tipped.
He said, “The rot in the Nigerian 
Prisons Service is serious. The prohibited items that the warders wanted
 to seize were brought into the yard by the same warders.
“The inmates had been enjoying this 
privilege through trafficking by the warders. It is only natural that 
they will fight back, and it is a bad trend for the prisons service.”
VIP inmates resist search 
It was gathered that the convicts, who 
were kept in a block called ‘VIP’, were allowed to enjoy certain 
privileges not permitted by the prison rules and regulations.
Sources stated that against prison 
rules, awaiting trial inmates were allowed to stay in the VIP block as 
it was more comfortable.
It was learnt that the dormitory-like 
block, where the awaiting trial inmates were kept, was congested with 
poor ventilation while the convicts’ cells were more pleasant to stay.
A source said, “What happened on Monday 
was that as the officers moved to carry out a search of their cells, the
 inmates refused and before you know it the situation had degenerated 
into an altercation between the inmates and the officers with some 
convicts trying to physically attack the warders.
“The armed squad had to fire into the air and they also released some tear gas canisters to bring the situation under control.”
In June, the prisons service dismissed a female prison officer for smuggling alcoholic drinks into the Kirikiri prison in Lagos.
About two weeks ago, the Federal 
Government dismissed 23 prison officers for alleged complicity in 
jailbreaks at the Kuje Medium Security Prison, Abuja, and the 
Koton-Karfe Prisons, Kogi State.
The Civil Defence, Fire, Immigration and
 Prison Services Board, at its emergency meeting held on August 11, 
2016, approved the dismissal of three senior prison officers serving in 
Kuje Prison and three other senior officers serving in Koton-Karfe 
Prison for their complicity in the escape of prisoners from the 
respective prisons.
In addition, the Controller-General of 
Prisons, Ahmed Ja’afaru, had also approved the dismissal of seven junior
 prison officers serving in Kuje Prison and 10 other junior staff 
serving in Koton Karfe prison, who were also implicated in the 
jailbreaks
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